4X Pro Tour Round 2: Results

Words: Dave Thomason
Photos: Charles Robertson

World Champion Mikael Prokop Practicing in the Dry

Saturday saw the second round of the 4X Pro Tour in a VERY wet Poland. I wasn’t there, but the live feed on freecaster showed that the formerly rapid and dusty track was a bit of a mudbath.

Still, this made for some pretty awesome racing, and with 94 male riders signed up, the tour is really looking strong.

 

This happened quite a lot...

The British boys didn’t have a great time of it, but Beaumont’s misfortune in the first round was our fortune as he then went into the commentary box and really made the live feed work – it’s worth a watch if you haven’t already seen it.

Anyway, here are the male results:

And with only four women, it went straight to the final, in which Britain’s Katy Curd held off a strong Celine Gros to take the win.

1. Katy Curd
2. Celine Gros
3. Lucia Oetjen
4. Tereza Votavova

Ok riders, random start…

See you in a couple of weeks for Round 3 at Val di Sole.

Riders Retreat Diaries – Goodbye NZ, hello France

All good things must come to an end and it’s time for me to board the plane from Queenstown back to Heathrow, where I’m promised a several hour queue should be waiting for me before they let me into the country; a good way to prepare for 4 weeks in the UK I’d say. I would be rather more depressed if the Morzine season wasn’t so tantalizingly close.

Sun, Sea, Sand and Bikes - how could I possibly miss this!?

Sun, Sea, Sand and Bikes - how could I possibly miss this!?

The last month here in NZ has been a busy one. Fearing that I was running out of time I spent most of it trying to tick-off all of the must-do’s the country has to offer. This involved travelling around a large chunk of the South Island in my now much-loved 1990 Toyota Corolla doing a mixture of typical tourist trips and mountain biking. Followed by another short stint in Queenstown before trying to do the same in the North Island on the way home.

Riding in natural beach forest in the South Island

Riding in natural beach forest in the South Island

There’s mountain biking everywhere in this country, so long as you’re prepared to put a bit of pedalling in, but boy is it worth it! I’d also highly recommend skydiving, bungy jumping, jet boating, whale watching, looking at various volcanoes, geysers and geo-thermal things and some big walks. There’s too much fun to be had in this country!

Skydiving - one of the must-do's off the list

Skydiving - one of the must-do's off the list

As if one needed convincing as to how seriously up and coming Queenstown is going to be on the global mountain bike scene, the 11-day Queenstown Mountain Bike Festival should be enough to convert you.

Dirtmasters DH with funky afternoon light

Dirtmasters DH with funky afternoon light

It wasn’t all about big bikes and serious biking. Sure, there was a good chunk of that with the Teva Slopestyle, Super D (Enduro) and Dirtmasters DH. But there was also events for the kiddies, family as well as roadies, triathlons and the like. Supporting two wheels from all angles!

Teva Slopestyle - We've all seen backflips a hundred times, but this event was awesome

Teva Slopestyle - We've all seen backflips a hundred times, but this event was awesome

I’ll miss Queenstown. I’m fairly sure I’ll be back soon in one guise or another pretty soon – perhaps with  Riders Retreat?? But for now, it’s time to get home, unpack my bike, clean it, and get it back down to France for the Morzine season. I’ll see you there!

More sun sea and bikes (Saracen Ariel)

More sun sea and bikes (Saracen Ariel)

In the meantime please enjoy this random selection of extra photos. And this video of Dirt Park, just down the road from QT; make sure you hit this up with Queenstown Bike Taxis if you’re visiting.

Mount DOOM! Apparently. I can't actually remember LOTR all that well...

Mount DOOM! Apparently. I can't actually remember LOTR all that well...

Bungy Jumping - another must do crossed off

Bungy Jumping - another must do crossed off

Written by: Paul Thomas @ www.ridersretreat.co.uk.

The official 2012 IXS MacAvalanche video – presented by Wideopenmag!


Find Cheap Mountain Bikes At Mpora Gear

… You’ve seen Richie’s DriftHD camera run from the MacAvalanche – time for the full edit.

Join Rich and the MacAvalanche crew as they take on the wildest race in the UK. Meet the riders, get up on the hill and generally soak up the vibe of the event… without having to sit on the site of a mountain in force 10!

For Rich’s report on the event – check out his earlier post here:

http://wideopenmag.co.uk/news/14022/wideopenmag-versus-the-2012-glencoe-macavalanche

British 4X round 2: PORC

Words: Alastair Keen

Photos: Dave Franciosy

Yes, it was a muddy one...!

If this were a cinema trailer it would read ‘In a small village in Kent a group of hardy mountain bikers battled wind, rain and mud to fight it out for 4X glory.’ However, more accurately, we spent a weekend sleeping in cars, hiding from the rain, slogging through mud, getting wet and trying not to slide about on our arses!

So Sunday saw round 2 of the British 4X series down at PORC in Kent and weather aside it was a really good one! Most had travelled down saturday but not many had braved camping with both me and Dave opting for kipping in the car!

The track hasn’t really changed over the years with the odd tweak here and there but generally consisting of a very short first straight jumping into a jump into a wideopen (boom!) left had corner with a couple of pump bumps on the inside and a tight exit straight into a right hand corner. Once you’ve navigated your way through here without colliding with other riders (or the floor if you’re trying an inside move) you’ve got a lot of pedaling to pick up speed along the longest, fastest straights in the business. This consists of a small double that had to be pedaled over in the mud, a wooden bridge (that you can jump in the dry) landing down a long steep bank that throws you into a small table that required some squashing followed by a long triple and a double. You’re flying down here and at the ends a big tight 180 berm that was pretty squirly in the mud and an even tighter inside berm that resulted in some die hard passing attempts a lot of which ended up in a heap on the floor. From here down it was 4 corners linked with the remains of some straights that had just turned to a quagmire which were manageable on the racing line but either side it was just goo!

Practice started pretty much on time but no one was really too hyped on riding so apart from the younger guys the first hour was fairly quiet. Having missed saturday I got on the go fairly quickly and first run down with normal tyres on I was more a passenger than a rider! Out came the Conti Baron Tyres and 2nd run I found some grip, with massive ruts in the mud it was still pretty hard to go in the right direction at times but the more people riding the better it got! I’d like to say who was looking quick at this point but most people were either brown or in waterproof gear so it wasnt too easy to tell who was who at speed!

At the end of practice there was an announcement that the compressor had broken that runs the gate so there would be a break while they went to buy one and racing would start at 1. This gave some time to clean bikes, get food and dry off a bit.

Next announcment went slightly differently, they were unable to get a new compressor and would be using a manual release with a random drop. At first everyone was a bit doubtful of this, but as we went through the day it definitely evened things up and made for even better racing!

The weather brightened up!

Race time came around, the weather brightened up and right from the start it was pretty action packed! With the combination of totally random gate and track conditions the corners were getting a lot of action…

First up were the Big Fun cats and they may be having fun but there’s some pretty talented riders in there who’ll be hitting the main categories pretty soon! In big fun Ash Brown on his new Nuke Proof was storming all day either leading from the front or coming from behind! Unfortunately while in second in his semi, he had a collision with a track marking post just feet from the finish leaving him out for the count and in a pretty bad state. This left Mr commentator Andrew Cooper of Redneck racing with a clear run in the final to take the win! Props to Joe Wells who was sitting at the back of the final so decided to throw a no foot can mid run for the crowd, lucky the man from BC wasn’t looking!

The seniors category is always one of the biggest and with some of these boys plenty fast enough to be in the elite field and the rest wanting to prove them selves it makes for exciting racing! Dave Richardson and Dave Roberts were the boys to beat here and they were making the others work for it! Massive well done to Matt Hillyard in 3rd, he spent a lot of last year out with a broken wrist and the year before was only a novice so he’s come a long was in a short time!

In the semi-old mans category Gareth Parr was really giving it some boost and every time I saw him he was in the lead with a massive grin on his face! Fox Willis of P Yates Cycles was loving the conditions and taking full advantage of his dh background getting 2nd in what could be his first 4x race?

Juniors are young quick and bounce more than us old boys so there was a lot of first corner action here and the dh boys from Pearce Cycles were getting stuck in to the challenging conditions with Zac Emmett taking 2nd ahead of Joe Mallison of 44 Racing. Jordon Lunn of Identiti has dominated this year though, after proclaiming he was done with 4x on Facebook just before round 1 I bet the others were wishing he had stuck with that!

The Wideopen boys discussing tactics

Now on to the big category of the day, the Elites!
First up the ladies and with 4 experienced world cup 4x riders, most of whom have been having a go at dh, and a freshly converted dh master battling it out this was a close one! Joey Gough took the win with the bmx edge on the gate and seeming to have a bit more power on the long straight. Emily Horridge was rocking a cut dh spike up front and a trusty Conti Mountain King on the back so was planning on making some moves and move she did putting her dh experience to use on the loose insides and really battling with Joey all the way down in the final swapping the lead between them all over the place! Suzanne Lacy was right on their arses all the way down with Cara Murray trailing after losing pace in the first corner scuffle, Jess Greaves rounded out the podium taking the B final win by a country mile.

Now the big guns (and me), the men’s elite field! With 11 seasoned elites, 3 fresh fast kids and 4 of last years top seniors it was a pretty stacked category and everyone was hungry for the win. The random gate and tight first corner really had its biggest effect here causing some real surprise results and showing a bit of cunning goes a long way! As usual the 4 main men to watch were going to be Scott Beaumont, Scott Roberts, Lewis Lacy and Nate Parsons, but they weren’t getting it all their own way with Nate going out in quarters and all of them fighting for the lead through the day. Young guns Alex Metcalf and Isaac Mundy were killing it all day taking it to the big boys every chance they got! The Slam 69 boys were having totally different days, National champ Limbo couldn’t catch a break all day with 2 crashes whereas Rich lane was giving it all he had to take 6th overall. Last years senior star Tom Gethin retired early after an over zesty blocking move left him no where to go but off course and into a big crash. Finally for the star of the day, me haha! After injury put me out of round 1 this was my first elite race and damn was it hard! Moto 1 I did a great job of following the others down the track, Moto 2 went a bit better however. I got drawn against 3 of the quickest boys going, Beaumont, Roberts and the ever creative Duncan Ferris and being in gate 4 I wasn’t holding out much hope, the gate dropped and they went, knowing full well I couldn’t keep up on speed I decided try going round the back of them and diving down the very inside of the first corner and it worked, the Scotts came out in the lead side by side but I was right next to them and was slightly stunned but they pulled away as soon as the pedals started turning leaving me trailing and Duncan breathing down my neck. The entire main straight I was doing my best to sit in the middle of the racing line waiting for the pass but it didn’t come untill the big 180 corner, I went outside and Duncan dived round the inside berm getting a massive lead but was carrying a bit too much speed for the chewed up berm and washed out on the exit!

Final Moto was a good one, I got drawn with Mark Milward and my old senior rival Luke ‘limbo’ Limbrick. I was in gate 1 Mark in 2 and limbo in 3, the gate dropped and I edged a few inches on the others and moved over on them to set me up better for the corner, little known to me at this point the other came together and went down, coming out of the first corner I was pedalling my ass off to hear the shouts from the crowd “keeny what the hell are you doing” I look back and the others were no where to be seen, I was grinning and playing on the jumps the entire way down to my first Elite Moto win! Stoked! Quarters were next and I had a hard one, Will Evans, Mundy and Milward again, I was in gate 3 and as soon as it dropped I gave it every little bit I had and was leading down to the corner but not enough to get an advantage and Will and Isaac were just too close so too late I tried swinging wide and getting round them but too little too late and I got stalled on Wills back wheel, despite my best efforts to catchup i’d lost too much ground and came 4th.

Back to the action and the main final, Beaumont led from the off with Roberts hot on his heels, Isaac was holding 3rd with Lacey trying desperately to get by but Mundy was blocking him left right and centre, and that’s how it finished.

All in all some of the best racing I’ve seen and big props to Chris Roberts and his team for making the most of terrible conditions to put on an awesome race!

Big thanks to our sponsors, particularly this weekend Continental for keeping me upright and Fox for all the kit that kept us dry and clean!

Wideopenmag versus the 2012 Glencoe MacAvalanche

Rich Thomas just landed back after a 4th place at the No Fuss Events MacAvalanche – here’s his report!

On the Wednesday before the race a got a text from Jamie asking if I was still on for the No Fuss Events Macavalanche, I was like, “urrrr yerrr you knows it butt. Sign me up!”

The next morning I spoke with Chloe from No Fuss and we hooked it up, booked some flights, booked a hotel and I was set..! Just so has it that my new Nukeproof Mega AM Pro had just turned up so I have the perfect bike for the job now..!

The track and format, I didn’t know much about the event or the format as I have never raced anything like this before. Basically, we would get 3 hours practice on the Saturday morning then the riders would be split into 3 heat races of 30-40 riders, mass start, from around 70% of the total track, the final 30% of ridgeline and snow would only be ridden in the finals, the top 10 finishers from each heat would go to the A final and so on. On Sunday you’d get a small amount of practice again before a few hours rest then the finals, C final first, then B, then the big one, the A final, which would no doubt be full of 30-40 really good riders.

So after a quick dash up on the old trusty Airbus A319 I was in Fort William at the hotel a total of 7 hours quicker than if I drove. Ideal. After a chilled evening with the guys from No Fuss and a bike building session I got up early and headed over to Glencoe, the weather was stunning. I was kind of confident going into this race and eager to get involved, it soon became clear when I rode the first 5 minutes of track that this was going to be chuffing hard, the track was basically like riding Fort William off piste so to speak, big bogs, compressions, rocks, snow and ruts, really one of the most demanding and technical tracks I have ridden, it was ok to potter down but racing people head to head… WILD!

The heat races; so after practice the wait was over and we finally got to line up head to head and race, I was in heat 1 with local boys and track builders Joe Barnes and Fergus Lamb and various other legends, this I was soon to find out… The countdown went and I got a good jump but Fergus cut me off into the first corner into the snow and I thought, he’s dead…….. ha he had a massive over the bars in the snow ruts and I got ahead of him, I got around one other guy and found myself in the lead.

For the next few minutes I got wild and didn’t look behind me not really knowing what to do, I kind of ran out of steam and Joe over took me which was cool, I’d just hold him up as he knew the track so well. Then out of the blue some random legend in all kooky euro kit overtook me and I was like… “i’m not having that” so I spent the next 5 minutes desperately trying to overtake him, I even fully dive bombed him into a rut and we both almost ate shit so bad but I just couldn’t get past.. We got to the bottom and I was thinking “whos this helmet then”………… He took his helmet off and it was only bloody Crawford Carrick Anderson, one of my all time idols as a kid. I didn’t even realise he still rode but I was ok with being smoked by him. We all had such a laugh telling the stories of the heat and Fergus’s big OTB at the start in full few of everybody! At least I made the A final so I could cut it loose and go for the win on the Sunday.

The finals; after a very chilled morning and some final practice sessions all the riders prepared to head up to the start for the finals, group C would ride first then so on. So all of us in the A final went up and watched as the others hurtled down the track at their respective speeds, some pinning it, others not so much.. However, all had one thing in common, by the start of the heat race section they all looked hanging. This was going to be hard. After the first two finals were down we all started the long hike up to the start, just below the summit, it took about 30 minutes to get everybody up to the start and you could really notice the altitude and the glare from the snow was dirty, we all lined up, abit of banter went down but you could tell who was serious… I think everybody was
abit nervous because the snow was long, deep and steep, it would be a run/try and ride deal, and evidently so time on your ass. What can I say about the next 10 minutes, well it was WILD, enjoy the headcam, I have chatted enough shit…

So what a wild weekend, a truly awesome event and a perfect excuse to get wild. I hope this event continues to run in the future. Massive thanks to No Fuss Events, IXS Sports Division and the Moorings Hotel in Fort William. And finally James and Liam for the lift to Glasgow airport on Sunday night as my hire car got over partied.. S4P. Cheers guys!

And thanks to all of the sponsors – Nukeproof, Conti, Fox, Five Ten, Action Cameras, Unior Tools, RoostDH, Tf Tuned and Fenwicks!

All the best, Rich T.

Thanks to the awesome people at http://www.nofussevents.co.uk/ for getting Rich to the ‘Mac!

All of the images and video on this page were shot using Rich’s team-issue DriftHD camera from Action Cameras.

bike-check – Rich T’s Nukeproof Mega

Team rider Rich T is up at the MacAvalanche this weekend on his brand new Nukeproof Mega.

The Mega landed fresh from UK distro Hotlines last Friday and is Richie’s swiss-army-knife bike for anything that doesn’t need a full on downhill bike. He’ll be racing enduros on her, smashing out mini-DH and hacking through a heap of XC training rides.

What he’s got is a Nukeproof Mega ‘AM Pro’ which is the top-spec complete build and is almost exactly as you can buy it from your local bike shop. Rich swapped out the Maxxis tyres that come as standard for his own Conti Rubber Queen 2.2′s and we’ve also given the wheels a rebuild and a tweek to make them roll a wee bit quicker.


The Mega is 160mm travel out back and comes with full Sram XO, Rock Shox Lyric RC2DH fork and Monarch RT3 shock, Reverb adjustable seat-post (damn useful for the Mac’) and Nukeproof finishing kit.

That’s it! We just wanted to show off the new bike!